ALT: graphite and crayon drawing, squiggly lines that form a bird-like shape with yellow and red coloration, standing in a thicket or pond of twisty blues.
ALT: crayon and ink drawing, horizontal stripes of pink, red, purple and blue on a yellow/orange ground. There’s a lot of wet-on-wet blurring and bleeding in the colors. And some things at the top that could represent sun rays or attack lines.
punchme (why I need to spend time contemplating lakes and mountains)
ALT: abstractish crayon drawing of somebody looking angry and angsty. mouth wide open, maybe yelling. Eyes are red rimmed spirals. Possibly punching themself in the throat.
ALT: watercolor painting, whimsical. Four pink and purple, fungal shaped beings stand in front of a little flower with outstretched leaf that seems to be conducting them in song.
ALT: crayon and ink. Two red birds in flight. the background is a wall of big windows, like a conservatory or large office building. There is some foliage at the bottom, and an unexplained curved line of dots the same color as the birds. Not really a flight path, or maybe it is?
ALT: water soluble crayon and ink, in the colors of chicory and daylilies. It looks like windows in an apartment building, sort of. The middle window has some plants in it. There’s a big arched window on the left, that has little stars or sparkles in it, and another smaller one on the top right with what could be wrought iron fancywork.
in response to my friend Jeff’s suggestion that “calligraphic chicory-monster-syllabary rain” might be forthcoming. But no monsters, at least in this one. Maybe they’re hiding in the foliage.
ALT: ink painting of chicory and poorly rendered daylilies scattered through a field of green
ALT: crayon and watercolor, in soft blues and red/pinks. The drawing is vertically oriented, with something like water on the lower part, but the upper part seems to be a lake-and-hill landscape, oriented 90 degrees off. You could probably orient the page so that the landscape would settle, but that’s not the way I drew it.